IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 17-0176
Filed May 16, 2018
ANTHONY DONTE RICHARDSON,
Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeffrey D. Farrell,
Judge.
An offender appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.
AFFIRMED.
Thomas A. Hurd of Glazebrook & Hurd LLP, Des Moines, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and Tabor, JJ.
2
TABOR, Judge.
Anthony Richardson appeals the denial of his application for postconviction
relief (PCR). In rejecting his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, the district
court observed that Richardson received “a very beneficial plea” as a result of his
attorney’s negotiations with the prosecution. On appeal, Richardson insists his
attorney was ineffective in failing to secure Richardson’s own phone records to see
if they would corroborate an alibi defense. Richardson also contends he did not
believe his attorney was ready to proceed to trial and left him no option other than
accepting the plea offer. Finding no merit in Richardson’s contentions, we affirm
the thorough and well-reasoned ruling by the district court.
The State originally charged Anthony Richardson with first-degree robbery,
first-degree burglary, and second-degree sexual abuse in connection with an
armed home invasion involving two assailants. Had Richardson been convicted
of those three class “B” felonies, he faced the possibility of seventy-five years in
prison with a mandatory minimum term of thirty-five years. Instead, in July 2014,
he accepted a plea offer amending the trial information to a single count of first-
degree theft.1 He also pleaded guilty to a separate charge of third-offense
possession of marijuana. Richardson did not file a motion in arrest of judgment.
In accordance with the plea agreement, the court sentenced Richardson to an
1
After learning his codefendant, Tyrone Cameron, had entered a plea agreement with the
State and was listed as a prosecution witness, Richardson entered an Alford plea—a
variation of a guilty plea where the defendant does not admit participation in the acts
constituting the crime but consents to the imposition of a sentence. See North Carolina v.
Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 37 (1970).
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indeterminate fifteen-year prison sentence with no mandatory minimum.
Richardson did not file a direct appeal.
In September 2014, Richardson filed a PCR application, as a self-
represented litigant, listing five grounds for relief: “(1) newly discovered evidence
the victim is recanting her statement saying she knows who the actual intruder is;
(2) ineffective assistance of counsel failure to investigate; (3) misidentification;
(4) subjective photo lineup; [and] (5) illegal sentencing.” His PCR attorney filed an
amended application in May 2015. The PCR court heard testimony from
Richardson in October 2016.2 The State countered with the deposition of plea
counsel Matthew Sheeley. In a twelve-page ruling, the district court denied the
PCR application. Richardson filed a motion to enlarge, asking the district court to
address whether “counsel’s failure to procure telephone records was ineffective
assistance.” The court issued an order specifically denying relief on the failure-to-
investigate claim, stating: “There is no indication whether the proposed records
exist, and if they did, what they would show.” The court denied a second round of
post-trial motions. And Richardson filed a notice of appeal.
On appeal, Richardson alleges attorney Sheeley breached a duty in failing
to properly investigate his alibi defense rendering his guilty plea involuntary. In
particular, Richardson claims counsel should have obtained his phone records to
show he was not at the scene of the crime. Richardson further complains, in a
single sentence of his appellant’s brief, that counsel’s “other actions” left him
2
Richardson also offered, as newly discovered evidence, deposition testimony from
codefendant Cameron in which he denied Richardson was with him at the victim’s home.
The PCR court did not find Cameron’s testimony to be credible. Richardson does not
raise this issue on appeal.
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“feeling he had no option” but to enter an Alford plea. Those actions included
failing to interview the alleged victim and telling Richardson that he was
unprepared for trial.
“[A]ll [PCR] applicants who seek relief as a consequence of ineffective
assistance of counsel must establish counsel breached a duty and prejudice
resulted.” Castro v. State, 795 N.W.2d 789, 794 (Iowa 2011) (citing State v.
Carroll, 767 N.W.2d 638, 644 (Iowa 2009)). But a claim of ineffective assistance
will only survive a guilty plea if counsel’s pre-plea omission rendered the plea
involuntary or unintelligent. Id. at 793. “The burden to prove the prejudice element
ultimately requires a [PCR] applicant who has entered a plea of guilty to establish
a reasonable probability of a different outcome (stand for trial instead of pleading
guilty) if the breach had not occurred.” Id. at 794.
Richardson did not credibly establish that had attorney Sheeley checked for
“potentially exculpatory phone records,” Richardson would have stood for trial
instead of accepting the “very beneficial” plea deal. We agree with the district court
that Richardson fails to establish a breach of a duty where it is not clear what
seeking those records would have achieved. They are Richardson’s own records,
so presumably Richardson should be able to assert what they would show, but he
does not make such an assertion. We also agree with the district court’s
assessment that Sheeley’s strategic decision not to depose the victim did not
impact Richardson’s decision to enter an Alford plea; Richardson “fully intended to
proceed to trial whether or not the victim was deposed. He only decided to
consider a plea after his former codefendant entered into a plea agreement and
the State added him to the witness list.” Finally, the district court aptly dispensed
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with Richardson’s strained interpretation of Sheeley’s statement that he was not
prepared for trial, explaining the experienced defense attorney “was being
facetious”—“simply making a point with defendant that his decision not to waive
speedy trial carried some tradeoffs with the ability to fully prepare for trial.”
After reviewing the criminal and PCR records and Richardson’s claims, we
affirm the decision of the district court by memorandum opinion pursuant to Iowa
Court Rule 21.26(1)(d) and (e).
AFFIRMED.